Showing posts with label cute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cute. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

HelloGiggles & Gallery 1988 Present: Young Adult


I'm very excited to be a part of the upcoming Young Adult show at Gallery 1988 Melrose opening Feb 2nd in Los Angeles. Gallery 1988 collaborated with the website hellogiggles (an online community for women founded by Zooey Deschanel, Molly McAleer and Sophia Rossi) on this show themed around young adult book series such as Nancy Drew, Sweet Valley High and the Baby Sitters Club (my personal third-grade favorite). 

I decided to draw the four original members of the BSC (Kristy, Claudia, Stacey, and Mary Anne) and created 9x12" stretched canvas prints of the individual girls and an 11x17" giclee print of all four together (signed & numbered limited run of 20!) 






Monday, November 17, 2008

DIY Totoro cards.

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We've been on a Totoro kick lately, and the latest installment is this set of 4 printable Totoro holiday cards. They're up in our Etsy shop. Once you purchase the PDF, you can print as many as you like! Keep them for yourself, or give out to friends, or print up a set of 10 for a great gift. There are four different colors included, so you can mix and match. Each card template even has lots of helpful tips for the DIYer, like, "CUT HERE" and "FOLD HERE." And just a tip, folding works best if you either crease or score the fold line a bit. Makes for a much cleaner fold. 

They measure 5.5 x 4" and should fit most medium envelopes (not included).

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I'm finishing up some linocut prints of the same illustration. Except these are limited edition, hand-carved and hand-printed cards. I only have the hats to print and then I'll post pics. I really like how they came out, the ink has a mind of its own. Pretty much the opposite of computer-drawn work. Except it started on the computer. Which makes me like it even more. I'm big on that whole computer/handmade/mush-em-all-together thing, if you haven't noticed.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Mirror Monster! Rar!

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Last night Mona finished working on our first Mirror Monster . We got some small blank mirrors from the IKEA place, and Mona etched some fangs into the glass, and then hand painted some eyes (with only a little touchup help from me). They look black but they're actually Paynes Gray, which is more interesting and better than black. Mona's quite proud of her creation.

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I like how such small, subtle details can completely change the character of an object. What is ostensibly a pair of triangles and circles, now becomes a cute and super-fierce monster face rar.

We debated back and forth about whether or not we should stain him. Mona really liked the bare-wood naked look, and so do I, but I also wanted to try staining him with this transparent green stain we have. Then we remembered we have like four of these mirrors, so the next one will be green.

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To finish up, I stamped the back with our Etsy store address and a little fly stamp I carved. The mirror has some screw-hooks for hanging, but we decided to not install them and let the new owner decide how to display him.

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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

My first stamp!




I finally decided to try carving my very own stamp last night. Since Nathan keeps churning out awesome stamp after awesome stamp, how hard could it be? Turns out, it's kind of a pain in the ass at first, but so worth it once you get the hang of it.

As an illustrator who works almost exclusively on the computer, whether using the dreaded pen tool in Adobe Illustrator or drawing on my Wacom tablet in Corel Painter, kickin' it old school and actually making something by hand was a challenge for me. You see, linocutters do not have an "undo" command. So when you carve a chunk out of your line art on a stamp, it stays carved. Ugh! This means I had to work slower and more patiently than usual. Nathan was a big help and showed me some techniques like... carving in narrow, shallow strokes instead of deep gouging ruts (maybe I need a better outlet for my pent-up energy?) Also, in the real world, there's no "zoom" tool. Some of the details are so tiny, I felt like my eyes were going to cross and stay that way.

Gripes aside, working with physical tools and materials that don't always behave how you want them to was actually kind of theraputic for me, like putting Elmer's glue on your hands and slowly peeling it off.

Nate and I both worked on the same stamp design (a little Totoro) so I could compare my shaky job with his rockin' one. It was hard work, but once I saw my finished stamp, it made me want to make more.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Jumpin' on the Etsy Bandwagon!





We just opened up our own Etsy shop and will soon be adding some cute items for purchasing by you and your friends and loved ones and co-workers.

Our first item is Kevin the polymer clay jack-o-lantern.

Sunshine Cupcake: The Store